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A Thousand Years of Good Prayers

United States

2007

83 Min
Color
1.78:1
English, Farsi, Mandarin
  • Currently 3.3/5 Stars.
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DIR Wayne Wang

PROD Yuki'e Kitô, Wayne Wang

SCR Yiyun Li

DP Patrick Lindenmaier

CAST Henry O, Feihong Yu, Vida Ghahremani

ED Deirdre Slevin

PROD DES Vincent De Felice

MUSIC Lesley Barber

San Sebastián: Golden Seashell

Synopsis

Elderly Mr. Shi (Henry O) arrives from China to spend time with his divorced daughter, Yilan (Faye Yu), hoping to help her sort out her life in this strange new country. Yilan, although polite, doesn’t feel like being the dutiful daughter. Unlike Geraldine in Dim Sum, Yilan can’t wait to be rid of her parent, whose need to pry into and control her like becomes a nuisance – even if he does lovingly cook up multi-course meals for her at the end of the workday. Mr. Shi cannot understand his daughter or the rift between them. The only person he shares some connection with in this cold new universe is Madam (Vida Ghahremani), an elderly but vivacious Iranian woman living with her son and his family. They begin to meet regularly on a local park bench. Without a common language, they resort to expressing themselves to one another in a mix of their respective languages and broken English. While they seem to communicate with each other easily, Mr. Shi and his daughter find themselves at an impasse. One day Yilan reveals to her father that expressing herself in English is far easier than in Chinese.

Director

Original

Wayne Wang

Born in Hong Kong and based in America, director Wayne Wang studied photography, film, TV and painting in the US before landing several directorial assignments in his homeland (these included the Chinese episodes of Robert Clouse’s “The Golden Needles” in 1974 and a popular TV show based on “All in the Family”). He returned to the US and scraped together $22,000 to complete “Chan is Missing” (1982), a hip, Zen-inspired San Francisco detective story which also carefully dissected prevailing Oriental stereotypes. This landmark independent film became a critical and commercial success for its rare, authentic slice of Asian-American life in a sometimes wildly comic narrative that straddled genres. The film remains an inspirational touchstone for Asian-American filmmakers attempting to get their voices heard in the American cinema.

Wang’s second film, “Dim Sum: A Little Bit of Heart” (1984), again centered on San Francisco’s Chinese-American community. The film playfully yet poignantly… read more

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Ana Curbelo

5Jan11

really enjoyed it

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hafilova

10Mar10

a simple heartwarming movie about human relationship

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